Newspaper Page Text
DOKS YOUIt HACK ACHE?
Core the Kidneys and the Pain Will
Never Keluru,
Ohly one sure way to cure an ach
ing back. Cure the cause, the kid
nays. Thousands tell
of cures made by
M Doan’s Kidney Pills.
-dwfr \ John C. Coleman, a
\ prominent merchant
ot Swainsboro, Ga.,
/says: "For several
years my kidneys
-'W were affected, and
my acit ached day
mtaSßri 1 and night. I was
languid, nervous and lame in the
morning. Doan’s Kidney Pills helped
me right away, and the great relief
that followed has been permanent.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foßter-Milburn Cos.. Buffalo. N. Y.
No man can bo certain that a wo
man is going to love him until her
father objects to him.
Piles Cured in 0 to 14 Day*.
PMO Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
•Me of Itching. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding
Files In Bto 14 day* or money refunded. SOc.
The difference between wages and
aalarls lies wholly in the amount of
•ach.
Garfield Ten, nature's remedy for a tor
pid, inactive or disordered liver; for con
stipation, sick-heodaehe. indigestion.
Nitro-Glycerine and Dynamite.
Nitro-glycerlne is made by spray
ing ordinary glycerine into a mixture
•omposed of one part of nitric acid
•nd two parts of sulphuric acid. A
•cum slowly forms on the surface of
4he fluid. This is carefully skimmed
•fT and washed thoroughly to remove
•11 free acid. The Innocent and harm
less glycerine has then developed ex
plosive properties of a fearful nature,
dynamite is prepared ‘by soaking a
peculiar variety of earth with nitro
glycerine. The first man to devise
the prosent mode of utilizing nitro
glycerine was a Swedish engineer,
*med Nobel. He made millions of
4ollars out of the business of manufac
turing dynamite and allied substances,
©an cotton Is nothing but ordinary
•otton soaked in the same acids as
•re used in making nitro-glycerine.
Though the fibre must be washed, ex
actly as nitro-glycerine is, the mys
terious transformation in its character
takes place quickly.
Tough on the Cur.
A curious custom connected with
the Servian army is the manner in
which most of the regiments carry
the big drum. It is not, as in most
•ountriea, stung in front or the man
who plays it, but Is placed upon a
•mall two-wheeled cart drawn by a
•Bng' has been so trained
Jifht'lt keeps Its ev-en
the longest and most temfrUS’marches.
The drummer takes up a position be
hinul the cart and perform* on the
instrument as It moves along.-In
41anapolls News.
’ HISTRIONIC.
There was on the stage a realistic
cene in which a surgical operation
■was apparently performed.
“Hold on!” cried a voice from the
audience. “Aren't you going to give
os some of that chloroform?"
Of icourse. the management was
displeased, but 'there is a point at
•which realism palls. Philadelphia
1/dcDger.
-- .
THE WHOLE FAMILY
Mother Finds a Food For Grown-I T p9
\ and Children as Well.
* Food that can he eaten with relish
and benefit by the children as well as
the older members of the family,
makes a pleasant household commod
ity.
Such a food is Grape-Nuts. It not
only agrees with and builds up chil
dren. but older persons who, from
l>ad babits of eating, have become
dyspeptics.
A Pbtla. lady, after being benefited
herself, persunded her husband to try
Grape-Nuts for stomach trouble. She
trrites:
“About eight years ago I had a se
vere attack of congestion of stomach
and bowels. From that time on I had
to be very careful about eating, as
nearly every kind of food then known
to me seemed to cause pain.
“Four years ago I commenced to
nee Grape-Nuts. I grew stronger and
better, and from that time I seldom
have been without It; have gained In
health and strength and am now
heavier than I ever was.
“My husband was also in a bad
•ondition his stomach became so
weak that he could eat hardly any
thing with comfort. I got him to try
Grape-Nuts and he soon found his
Stomach trouble had disappeared.
“My girl and boy, Sand 9 years
old, do not want anything else for
breakfast but Grape-Nuts and more
healthy children cannot bo found."
Name given by Postum Cos., Battle
iCreek, Mich. Read the little booklet,
rThe Road to WellvUle," In pkgs.
aßPhert’* n reason.’*
EIGHTY KILLED
SCORES INJURED
In Frightful Explosions on Big
French Battleship.
VICTIMS BADLY MANGLED
Powder Magazines Aboard Vessel Blow
Up in Rapid Succession Scattering
Death and Destruction.
A terrible disaster occurred at Tou
lon, France, Tuesday afternoon. The
powder magazines on board the
French battleship Jma blew up at
1:35 o'clock, and as a result Cap
tain Adigard, commander of the bat
tleship; Captain Verlirer, chief of
the staff of the Mediterranean squad
ron. and Dom seventy to eighty blue
jackets are dead, while Rear Admiral
Mancerou and hundreds of other men
ate buffering from injuries, some of
them horrible in their extent. Naval
circles are aghast, aud the public
is stunned by the appalling catas
trophe, coming so soon after the ios3
of the French submarine Latin, in
which sixteen men met death.
The entire afterpart of the Jena
was blown to pieces. The bodies of
the victims were hurled through the
air by a succession of explosions,
and panic stricken workmen at the
arsenal tied from the vicinity of the
dry dock for their lives. Scores of
those on board the Jena jumped over
board on the stone quays and sus
tained serious injuries.
The primary cause o fthe accident
was the explosion of a torpedo. What
caused the explosion is not known,
but the powder magazines of the
Jena were set on fire and their con
tents, in exploding, practically de
stroyed a bat was considered one of
the best vessels in the French navy.
The Jena had just undergone a final
inspection of her hull and machinery,
the latter having been completely
overhauled preparatory to joining the
squadron The crew was in its full
strength, composing the rear ad
miral, twenty-four other officers and
530 men. Tho magazine had teen re
plenished recently and contained
many tons of both smokeless and
black powder, as well as a number
of charges for torpedoes. The crew
had finished their midday meal only
a short time before the explosion,
and had dispersed to various parts
of the vessel. Most of the men were
engaged in work connected with the
approaching departure of the war
■feiwp, b\u 'i'lite a large party had
been detailed to attend a lecture that
was being given fen ward.
The explosion came without warn
ing. The first shock was extremely
violent, and shook (he vessel fore and
aft. It was followed instantly by oilier
shocks.
The hundreds of men below deck
were in a tearful position. They were
encircled by smoke, and while they
groped heir way to tho exits, they
became the prey of suffocating fumes,
which caused many of them to fail
unconscious.
In tin. meantime, the detonations
had bee*, me more frequent, and the
entire a iter part of the ship vas vir
tually blown to pieces and caught fire.
Shells and charges of explosives in
tho magazines continued to explode,
and masses of metal were hurled into
the air to fall every w here about the
decks and the arsenal. These flying
missiles demolished the torpedo shed,
the engine works and pump house
nearby, and constituted a most seri
ous menace to ihe lives of those who
made Ge.-ii way towards the battle
ship to begin work of rescue. In spite
of the danger many heroic efforts
were made to render assistance, but
for the most part in vain, the Jena
was aflame from bursting projectiles,
and the fire prevented approach.
It is declared that for thirty min
utes the authorities were unable to
discover the keys with which to open
the locks to flood the dry docks and
submerge the ships, but when they
did finally open the locks the water
rushed in, and the explosions came
to an end.
Then amidst masses of dense smoke
the search fer the dead and wounded
was commenced The lower decks
were littered with the fragments of
shattered and torn bodies, while the
surrounding walls were dotted with
human f agments.
It will be impossible to ascertain the
exact number of killed and wounded
until a roll call is held, as many of
the men were completely blown to
pieces, while others are incinerated.
Many of those who escaped with
their liats suffered most severe in
juries, and becoming temporarily in
sane rushed frantically around until
! they fell exhausted.
Pope Leo XIII.'s Little Mistake.
The late Pope was once giving an
atidience, when his attendant, through
some oversight, neglected to intro
duce, by name, a very stout lady who
approached the throne. The Pope,
however, took the situation for grant
ed. “Vous etes une bonne mere de
famine chretienne, n’este-ce-pas?” he
asked gently.
In a horrified whisper, an attendant
intimated that the lady was unmar
ried. The Pope, with a smothered
gasp, sat back in his chair, turned his
face away and laughed. He composed
himself, however, so quickly that the
lady, whose knowledge of French was
not particularly good, never realized
his Holine3s’s faux pas.—Bystander.
FITS, Bt. Vitus’Dance. Nervous Diseases per
manentlycured by Dr. Klih'.i i.reat Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle und treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline. Ld.,‘J3l Arch St.. Phila., Pa.
1
In France the average span of life
is now seven years longer than Jt
was sixty years ago.
ENDURES ECZEMA 5 YEARS.
Sores Behind Ears Spread to Cheek*
—Best Doctors Fail—3ut Cuti
ra Remedies Effect Cure.
“Words are inadequate to express my
gratitude for Cuticura Remedies. I had
been troubled with eczema for five years
on iny ear and it began to extend on my
cheek. I had been doctoring with the
best physicians, but found no relief what
ever. When informing them that I could
not bear the itching i w-as told by one of
our best doctors, ‘not to scratch.’ As the
medicines and salves did me no good I
thought I would get the ‘Magic Three,’
Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment and
Cuticura Pills, costing me one-half of one
visit to my physician. After using as di
rected, with plenty of hot water, 1 can
truthfully state that I found instant re
lief. When I had used three boxes of
Cuticura Ointment and two cakes of Cuti
cura Soap I found my skin as soft and fine
as a baby’s. My circle of friends is very
large, and I am persuading them to use
Cuticui-a Soap and give up the kinds they
were using. I find no trouble, as my case
has proven to them that if Cuticura Oint
ment is good, Cuticura Soap must be like
wise. Miss Netfca Ayers, 131 Franklin
Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 1 and 15, 'o6.''
It takes a might}' good wife to make
up to a man what he spent to get
her.
To recover quickly from bilious attacks,
sick headache, indigestion or colds, take
Garfield Tea, fhs mild laxative. Guaran
teed under the l ure Food and Drugs law.
Their Own Way.
“Some women,” said Uncle Eben,
according to a writer in the Wash
ington Star, “not only want their
ow'n way, but dey wants de privilege
of blamin’ deir husbands foh lettin’
dem have it if it don’t turn out right.”
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollar* Reward
for any case of Catarrh .hat cannot be
cured by Hall’s Catarrh (jure.
F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo,'ot'
, We, the u dersigued, Save known F. J.
Cheney IST *he last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly honorable in all business
transactions and financially able to carry
out any obligations made by their firm.
West & Ibuax, Wholesale Druggists,
Toledo, O.
.Waumno, Rinnan & Marvin, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and mucuous sur
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
SOME KIND OF WEAPON NEEDED.
The waiter girl knew a thing or two
about table etiquette. So she sniffed
scornfully as she said:
“It’s not our custom to serve a
knife with pie.’’
“No?" remarked the patron in sur
prise. “Then bring me an ax.”—Chris
tian Register.
Only One “llromo Quinine”
That is Laxative Dromo Quinine. Similar',
lv named remedies sometimes deceive, the
first and original Cold Tablet is a White
Package, with black and red lettering.and
bears the signature of E. W. Grove. 25c.
Prosperity bring friends, but hard
luck proves them.
Worth Knowing About.
If you need a first-class laxative, there
is nothing better nor safer than that old
family remedy. Brandreth’s Pills. Each
pill contains one grain of solid extract of
' sarsaparilla, which, with other valuable
vegetable products, make it a blood puri
fier of excellent character. If you are
troubled with constipation, one pill at
night will afford great relief.
Brandreth’s Pills are the same fine lax
ative tonic pill your grandparents used.
They have been in use for over a century
and are sold in every drug and medicine
store, either plain or sugar-coated.
It’s a pity we can’t keep our good
resolutions by placing them In cold
storage.
1 " " 1 ■
Itch cured in 30 minutes by WoolfonP*
Sanitaiy T jotion; never fails. Sold by Drug
gets. Si ail orders promptly filled bv Dr.
E. D<*tctaonMed.Cc.,CrawfordsviUe,lnd. $L
If advice was worth as much as
it is supposed to be, it would never
be as free as it is
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens thegums. redncesinflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle
If all men were to get what they
deserve It would be necessary to build
a lot more jails.
! STRIKERS RULED THE CAY
!
Attempt to GpL'a e irolley Cars in
Louisville Finite- *£ okce Protec
tion Entirely Inadequate.
A continuation of the disorders of
Monday; the suspension of service at
3 o’clock Tuesday atternOon after an
intermittent and ineffectual service
and the first move towards interven
tion by- the commercial interests of
the city were the features of the third
day of the sti’\te ol the union em
ployees of. the Louisville railway com
pany at Louisville, Ky.
During the day half a dozen per
sons, all policemen, or employees of
the company,were hurt, rone of them
dangerously, however, by stones and
flying glass, as the lcsult of attacks
cu cars by strike sympathizers. A
fow more cars were run than on Mon
day and they made more trips, but
the pationage amounted to nothing.
All service was abandoned for the
day at 3 o’clock in the afternoon.
Committees representing the Com
mercial Club, board of trade, and the
Merchants and Manufacturers’ Asso
ciation called on Mayor Barth to lay
before him reports of inefficiency and
inadequate force furnished by the po
lice department for ] rotection of cars
and passengers and suppression of
disorders. Mayor Barth gave emphatic
assurance that the men available for
duty had done all possible, but he
further pledged himself to see that
the police protection would be up
to all requirements from now on.
The committees voted him the
thanks of their respective organiza
tions and sent subcommittees to con
fer with President Minerary of the
railway company. The result of these
conferences were strictly guarded and
all concerned refused to say what
transpired. It wai reported, however,
on good authority that the commercial
bodies urged Mr. Mi net ary to consent
to an arbitration of ihe strike- issues,
but that no definite decision was ar
ri/ed at.
Conditions Tuesday denoted some
improvement in the work of police de
partment, but even with officers on
every car sent out, there were not
enough men to quell the disorders
that continued at intervals from the
time the first car started out until the
company abandoned their efforts and
called all cars into the barns. Cars
were stoned and their windows bro
ken, switches plugged, wagons placed
on tracks and in one instance a bar
ricade 6 feet high was erected across
the tracks at Eighteenth and Chest
nut streets.
The railway company during the
morning returned to the postoffice
pouches of mail which it was unable
ta deliver -gc the substations, because
no men could be found who would
take the cars tc the desired points.
In one instance the United States
mail sign was torn from a cai. Judge
Walter Evans instructed the federal
grand jury with respect to the con
sideration of cases of this kind if
they are brought to their attention.
During the afternoon Mayor Barth
issued a proclamation to the people
calling upon -diem tc refrain from
congregating on street corners or tak
ing any part in the disorders.
HARGIS SOUGHi SY ASSASiIM.
Man Disguised as Woman Attempted Life
oi Feudist Leader.
A man. disguised as a woman, en
| terod the home of Judge James Har
| gis at Jackson, Ky., Monday night,
aud attempted to take his life.
June Jett, nephew cf Hargis, saw
the intruder in ihe kitchen and fired
a numbei' of shcii’a at him. The man
escaped uninjured.
MILL MLN S<£ ROOaIVtLF.
Southerners Call at White House tor Con.
terence Regarding immigration.
A Washing ten dispatch says: The
interview 8t the white house Tuesday
night between President Roosevelt
and sou.hern mill men and others in
l torested in the immigration movement
to the couth, was apparently satisfac
tory to the visitors, although no defi
nite conclusions weie reached. Prac
tically nothing new was developed.
CONVLNTION 01 ILL MAKERS.
Annual Meeting tie and in Atlanta With Many
Delegates in Attendance.
The annual convention of the
; Southern Ice Exchange was called to
order in Atlanta Tuesday morning,
with delegates from all over the
j south in attendance.
; The first session of the covention
! was held in the convention hall of the
Kimball House at 11 o’clock, and af
ter the visitors had been welcomed to
the metropolis of the south and as
sured that they could have anything
they wanted, the members got down
to business.
Bad Symptoms.
The woman who has periodical head*
aches, backache, sees imaginary dark
boots or specks floating or dancing before
li*er eyes, distress or heavy
full feeling in .Stomach, faint spells, drag
ging-downmfeling in lower abdominal or
pelvic region, easily startled or excited,
Irregular or painful periods, with or with
out ffclvic catarrh, is suffering from
weakri&ses amkaerangeinents that should
have etmy attention. Not ail of above
aae likely to be present In any
case at o/ie/ime.
Neglected or badly treated and such
cases_/)ft£n run into maladies which de
man/ die surgeon’s knife if they do not
resufoTatally.
No medicine extant_has_such a long
and punieraus
tm-gs as DrTTTeree’ii EarQil.l.e..£i escr i rj?
Lon. _ No meg wine has suen a strong
non-nrote-sinnsil fcj*
tymphials. The very best ingredients
known to medical science for the cure of
woman’s peculiar ailments enter into its
composition. No jJcohol, harmful, or
habit-forming drug is to be found in the
list of its ingredients printed on each
bottle-wrapper and attested under oath.
In any condition of tho female system,
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription can do
only good—never harm. Its whole effect
is to strengthen, invigorate and regulate
the whole female system and especially
the pelvic organs. When these are de
ranged in function or affected by disease,
the stomach and other organs of digestion
become sympathetically deranged, the
nerves are weakened, and a long list of
bad, unpleasant symptoms follow. Too
much must not be expected of this "Fa
vorite Prescription." It will not. perform
miracles; will not cure tumors —no med
icine will. It will often prevent them, if
taken in time, and thus the operating
table and the surgeon’s knife may be
avoided.
Women suffering from diseases of long
standing, are invited to consult Doctor
Pierce by letter, free. Ail correspondence
is held as strictly private and sacredly
confidential. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce,
Buffalo, N. Y.
Dr. Pierce’s Medical Adviser (lOOOpages)
is sent free on receipt of 21 one-cent
stamps for paper-covered, or 31 stamps
for cloth-bound copy. Address as above.
Tone Up S,
With Jj
Good |] f
Paint /Ifs
It is good s'.'?/ |
business to ua 0 /
keep prop- WW*
erty “toned l f \ iljJ
A coat of i li a
Pure White [ Sj \\ jj
Lead Paint
better and '
gives them a higher selling value, but
it makes things wear better and gives
them a higher Value for long wear.
Pure White Lead gives an opaque,
durable coat that protects and pre
serves from the ravages of time j
and weather. I
Prospective buyers of Pure
White Lead have heretofore
been subject to much attempted
fraud in adulteration and sub- LygyJ
stitution. You are now pro-,vls~2s
tected by the Dutch Boy trade
mark which is found on the side of
kegs containing only Pure White
Lfead, made by the Old Dutch Process.
®Look for the boy.
SEND FOR
BOOK
•■A Talk on -Paint,”
gives valuable infor
mation on the paint
subject. Sent free
upon request.
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY
in whichever of the follow
ing cities is nearest you :
New York, Boston, Buffalo, CflerWßßd,
Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis, Philadel
phia [John T. Low is Bros. Co.] Pittsburgh
Uvutionui Lead & Oil Co.]
WET WEATHEB WORK
HEALTHFUL
and
/. PLEASANT
///) 'lAr,// IF YOU WEAR
ibJ 'mV.ff *'s
/ iVMH
Ir\k / * /s H BR
l WATERPROOF
, , ! 1 OILED CLOTHING
'/ / / k D BLACK OR YELLOW
'\ \ i te. Perfect Protection
/ ~ l I Longest Service
jkvJMjt-i Low in Price
Sold Everywhere
too * ■
' * , TO■>•€* CO BO4TON U .A.
0t D*x CO v.H TtO TOCWTO C*S
Fortunate is he who never changes
bis opinion of himself.
MOZLEVS
LEMON ELIXIR.
1 Is not anew and untried remedy.
I More than %of a Century attests
its wonderful curative and health
giving properties, and serves to
show that it has no equal as a cure
for Coustipation, Biliousness, Indi
gestion, Sick-Headache, and all
I other ills arising from a
TGRPBD lIVER.
I Being strictly a vegatable com- j
| pound, it has no harmful or even
| unpleasant effects. Its action ii
| gentle but none the less thorough—
I cleansing the stomach and bowels
I of alt impurities, and toning up the
entire system to a healthy con
dition —leaving the person feeling
good, because’every organ is made
to perform its part perfectly.
EQC. AUD JI.C3 A 30TTLE. ill D3UO STORES.
‘‘One Dose Convinces.”